Classical asked:
"I am a professional player looking for a guitar without these problems for a recording project. Do your guitars have them? "
Y'know, I really couldn't say. I'm not trying to be 'flip' here: your hearing is different from mine, and no doubt much better. The only way for you to know whether my guitars would fill the bill for you is to try one.
Also: this is _not_ the place to be talking business.
Marc asked:
"In other words how do you make a guitar that responds the same to all frequencies?"
The short answer to that is, you can't. At least, it's not possible, IMO, to make a guitar with 'flat' response that would be usable, and if you did, it would probably sound like a tall glass of warm spit. As usual, we're trying for some sort of balance; a tone that is even enough, or that seems even enough, to be useful, with enough variation in detail to be interesting.
A truely 'flat response' system would be one that has very high losses. Since we've got only a limited amount of power to use we can't afford that. Loudspeaker systems are designed for flat response, and are generally terribly inefficient: down in the range of tenths of a percent. You make up for it by using a bigger amp. A vibrating string can only deliver a few hundredths of a watt, iirc, and you need a much more efficient 'speaker' if you're going to get anywhere with that little power. The usual figure cited for the efficiency of the guitar is somewhere in the neighborhood of 5%. That sounds low, but it's actually greater than that of most instruments. The violin is generally taken to be about 2% efficient, for example, and horns are much lower. They get volume by dumping in much more power.
The problem with a higher-efficiency system is that it will have more sharply defined resonant peaks. There isn't a lot you can do about that: it goes with the turf, so to speak. But there are ways to work around it.
One is to place the inevitable resonant pitches in such a relationship to each other that they 'couple'. In the guitar the two lowest resonant pitches are the 'Helmholtz' air mode and the 'main top' mode. The 'Helmholtz' mode is what you get from blowing on an ocarina or a soda bottle. The 'main top' resonance has the top vibrating like a loudspeaker cone. Because the air mooving in and out of the body pushes on the top, and the top pushes on the air, the two modes are strongly coupled, even though they are nearly an octave apart in isolation. The result is that they work together, which has the effect of pushing them further apart in pitch, and broadening the response peaks. All guitars with soundholes do this.
It's also possible to get the 'main back' resonant pitch to couple with the 'main top', by 'tuning' it to be close enough, but not too close, in pitch. This enhances the 'main air' peak in the spectrum, since the back can help move air through the soundhole, and also broadens the 'main top' peak. This tactic, of enhancing coupling between resonant modes, is a general way to even out the response of the guitar. But, there are only so many of these modes, particularly at low frequencies, so small discrepancies can matter a lot.
Flattening the response also comes at a cost. Our senses are attuned to changes. Things that don't change much, like rocks and trees, are generally neither deadly nor edible, so we don't waste processor power on them if we can help it. We're much more interested in whether that noise in the bush is a chicken or a tiger than we are in the bush itself. If you could make a guitar that had 'flat' response every note would have the same spectral 'recipe': the same balance of fundamental and upper partials. The player could vary that somewhat, of course, but the sound would still be boring. Think of a solidbody electric played 'clean' with the amp at very low power. So we're really looking for a spectrum that gives a different recipe for each note, and allows the player to control that recipe, but, at the same time, makes the tone sound 'even' enough in loudness and timbre that it's not too confusing.
This is _not_ easy. Fortunately, a lot of the work has been done for us by the people who devised the designs we tend to copy. But, 'the Devil's in the details', and, as Scott points out, that gets to be more and more true as the instruments get better. As Dante said, the closer you get to perfection, the more the imperfections matter. Partly the problem is that we're much more sensitive to higher frequencies, and that sensitivity varies a lot from one individual to another. What seems 'balanced' to me, with my particular set of ears, might have all sorts of strong and weak notes to somebody else. We also _learn_ to hear, and get better and better at picking out little things that we used to miss. And, of course, we learn to listen for different things: I'd say that most luthiers really do hear guitiars differently than most players, and sometimes it's hard to communicate those differences.
So, in some sense, we're not trying to make a guitar that responds 'evenly', but we're trying to fool poeple into thinking it does. 'You can't fool all the people all of the time' was never more truely spoken.
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